About Case Logic

Jamie Temple was tired of the sounds from the back seat. It was 1984, and he was driving through the Rockies on a ski trip, but his trip was constantly interrupted by the noise of his audiocassettes shifting and clattering. Case Logic was his solution to music storage: he started out by designing two cassette cases, and over the years, his vision has evolved to protecting technology of all kinds. Today, Case Logic makes laptop sleeves, camera bags, backpacks, and phone cases.

This device works, just not very well at all. It was easy to set up, but once set up, the sound is awful. You could set it to the clearest radio station, connect your phone, and it will still sound like the worst radio station signal. Sound is fuzzy and in and out, extremely poor quality, and is not worth the money, time, and frustration.

The Case Logic Bluetooth Car Transmitter is mediocre. Although it does tune in to almost any station, finding a clear and strong signal is not easy. The technology is improving, but there is still way too much hiss in the background and the sound quality is not especially good. However, for what it does, it is priced well. I think the retail price is listed at near $100, which is pretty ridiculous; no one paid $100 for this device, but at around $20.00, it was a steal.

Works good for like 5 minutes before the audio starts cutting out. The signal is fine and not much static but after a few minutes it just starts and stops working. Took a few times taking it in and out for it to even turn on. I guess I'm just going to keep using my wired transmitter.